• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Leap Year 2012?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

turtlescales

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
159
Reaction score
3
Location
Spokane
I've been reading the leap year thread that started 2008, and am a bit envious of everyone who will be enjoying the reward of 4 years of patience and very much want to do this myself.

I didn't see any threads started about this leap year, and I am sorry if this is a re-post.

Last Leap year's mead was a Vanilla Metheglin... that sounds really tasty, but I already have one going for next New Year's Eve and I'd like to do something else. Not quite sure what, something relatively simple but still interesting..

Does anyone have any ideas, or want to join me?
 
Yeah, not sure I am feeling the cardamom myself. Citrus could be nice. Sort of at a loss, I have 4 gallons of different types going right now and another 2 planned, wanting to do something different but just not sure.

I suppose, we could do different meads, but the idea of everyone making the same recipe is pretty neat as well.
 
I might be interested, if it was unique enough to warrant special treatment. As for what to use -- I've only done 2 batches so far, so most everything is going to be new to me.
 
I like the idea and if the recipe sounds good if might join in, but I doubt if would leave it the full 4 years... Maybe just a bottle or two...
 
I'm game. I suggest either a strong traditional or a metheglin. Something that needs at least a couple years to mature well. I'd suggest avoiding fruit since many would be past prime in 4 years.

I'd like to do a lavender mead since Schram speaks highly of it, but would understand if people don't like that one.

We could each add in other spices to compliment at will (not dominate).

I'd start mine on leap day as a traditional, then add fresh lavender in the summer.
 
I'm game. I suggest either a strong traditional or a metheglin. Something that needs at least a couple years to mature well. I'd suggest avoiding fruit since many would be past prime in 4 years.

I agree, especially about a metheglin. Most fruit meads would be past their prime in 4 years.

I'm already planning on making several long-aged brews on Leap Day, and would be interested in adding another mead...
 
+1 on the metheglin. I'll have to wait until I get home, and ask the SO how he feels about lavender, but it could be interesting. I know he'd like the idea of a dry hopped mead or braggot as well. I've been looking around for recipes, but I'll keep looking. :fro:


Edit- I was browsing recipes on gotmead.com, and found this ginger lemon metheglin recipe that sounds quite tasty- http://www.gotmead.com/index.php?option=com_rapidrecipe&page=viewrecipe&recipe_id=193&Itemid=459
 
Sorry to keep bumping this, I work realllyyyy long days in front of a computer and end up with a lot of free time, haha.

Found some other ideas that sound tasty.... Acerglyn, Tej, Ginger Lemon, Black Mead, or Braggot. Maybe the Lavender, still not 100% sold on it but the long aging might make it quite nice. Some of the Tej recipes I've seen on this site sound pretty interesting, though some of the ingredients would probably need to be ordered.
 
Got Mead - Mead (honeywine) making, mead drinking, mead recipes - Lemon-Ginger Metheglin - J.M.[/url]

Looks like a good beginning point... My opinions are:

Someone will have to convince me to put bread into a mead in place of nutrient... I often put in raisins and tea... but bread?? If this were a sour, I could understand...

1.088 is pretty low for a mead that's designed to age 4 years. I make meads with an og of 1.140 that taste awesome after 1-2 years (ec-1118). I'm flexible, but I'd prefer something in the 1.12+ range... remember, 4 years is a long time.

The amount of spices seems low to me (I’m familiar with lemon and ginger, not with mace or rosemary). I'd expect the linked brew to be tasty in 6 months (it seems to have won awards less than a year after brewing). For a 4-year brew, I'd want quite a bit “more” (spices and og).

Remember – my opinion is worth 20% less than you paid for it.
 
You are right as to the starting point bit, I don't understand the bread thing myself. Aside from maybe, bored mazer wondering "will this work?" The other ideas are worth exploring as well, and the Tej is really intriguing. Acerglyn sounds great too, then again maple syrup isn't exactly cheap.
 
I think that's a great idea - but I'm afraid several people would burn their house down....
 
+1 on the Bochet, I need to do that anyway. A chocolate bochet would take years to mature. Could also do a Bochet metheglin, but I'm not sure what kind of spices would compliment carmelized honey.
 
I also like the idea of people doing different meads so that we have a broader idea of how meads age over 4 years.

Also makes it more interesting to compare if any of us want to swap meads.
 
+1 on the Bochet, I need to do that anyway. A chocolate bochet would take years to mature. Could also do a Bochet metheglin, but I'm not sure what kind of spices would compliment carmelized honey.

chocolate bochet? how will you do that pray tell? will you add it while the honey is boiling or will you add it in the fermenter? what kind of chocolate? powder, bean or bar? milk or dark? eating or baking? what brand of chocolate?
 
lawpaw, I think that is a great idea. Comparing notes and exchanging bottles sounds awesome. Of course, that would mean I'd have to put together more than just the single gallon I had planned on.... :mug:

I've got a gallon of bochet going already, stuff is going to be great I am sure. I cooked mine up inside, and did it the same way I make caramels but with a much larger pot. I have an electric range, I cooked mine at medium heat and pulled up a barstool next to the oven and hung out for a couple hours stirring. Just have to watch it is all, I didn't have any problems.
 
Bowow0708 said:
chocolate bochet? how will you do that pray tell? will you add it while the honey is boiling or will you add it in the fermenter? what kind of chocolate? powder, bean or bar? milk or dark? eating or baking? what brand of chocolate?

No, I would add it in the secondary (after racking off gross lees).

I plan on using powder, many use beans or the wafers.

My plan is to Carmelize meadowfoam honey for 1 hour (not completely carmelize), ferment till the yeast poops out, cold crash to compact lees, rack onto chocolate powder, age for 6 months on chocolate and fine lees (swirling every week).

Age, age, age.

I think the marshmallowy flavor of the meadowfoam and chocolate will go well. Considering steeping .5 lbs of biscuit and .3 lbs Special B in the water used (prior to adding to honey), to make it a smoreish bochet. Age on some heavy toast oak?
 
That Bochet recipe sounds amazing. I actually ended up borrowing a pot from a friend, I don't think she'll lend it to me again for more burned honey anytime soon. Cleaning it was a beast, and it took tiny bits of the finish off the bottom to get all the char off. Gonna be buying her lunch at work for awhile to assuage the guilt.

Found a bottle of Pear and Lavender Mead made by Rohan Meadery, will give that a go and see if I like the lavender. Otherwise, I think I am leaning more towards an acerglyn or a braggot for my own batch. To the people who chimed in on those options, any ideas for recipes?
 
I'm liking the idea of that bochet, sounds very interesting. how crucial would the meadow foam be? I've got a lot of Michigan wildflower on hand.
 
Not crucial for a bochet at all. I only chose meadowfoam because it is very marshmallowy when heated, so I thought it would go well with some chocolate.

Considering throwing in some buckwheat instead of steeped grains for a "malty" flavor. My buckwheat isn't very grainy tasting, but it is rich like molasses and that could be as good.
 
Considering throwing in some buckwheat instead of steeped grains for a "malty" flavor. My buckwheat isn't very grainy tasting, but it is rich like molasses and that could be as good.

I am going to have to come up with something good, so I can convince you to do a trade with me 4 years from now... (wink, wink, nudge, nudge.)

I cracked my bottle of Pear Lavender Mead, and this stuff is excellent. The lavender flavor is very subtle and rolls of your tongue and the pear adds light fruitiness, but doesn't overpower the honey. Of the meads I have tried, though as of yet all commercial, I think I like this one best. If I don't end up making Lavender Metheglin for Leap Day, it is definitely on the list. I wonder if a lavender braggot would be good, but I haven't tried braggot so am uncertain.
 
Not crucial for a bochet at all. I only chose meadowfoam because it is very marshmallowy when heated, so I thought it would go well with some chocolate.

Meadowfoam is one of my favorite honeys. I've used it with cocoa nibs and really liked the combination, but I'm not sure about using it in a Bochet. I haven't made one yet, but I wonder if you'd lose those wonderfully unique flavors after a couple hours of boiling.

I just made my first bochet about a week ago, the honey changed dramatically over the course of cooking. I cooked it for just over 2 hours on medium heat on my stove (3.5 pounds of clover honey) and the end result tasted nothing like the beginning.

BTW - I like the idea of a leap year bochet.
 
A chocolate bochet would take years to mature.

This sounds very, very good...a regular cocoa mead will take at least 2 years to come into it's own (if not just to clarify and be ready for bottling...) and does usually require some residual sweetness to really get the cocoa to pop...and a bochet usually has some built-in residual sweetness which could render backsweetening unnecessary... I've been thinking about making another chocolate mead, and another bochet anyway...why not combine the ideas?!

No, I would add it in the secondary (after racking off gross lees).

I plan on using powder, many use beans or the wafers.

My plan is to Carmelize meadowfoam honey for 1 hour (not completely carmelize), ferment till the yeast poops out, cold crash to compact lees, rack onto chocolate powder, age for 6 months on chocolate and fine lees (swirling every week).

Age, age, age.

I think the marshmallowy flavor of the meadowfoam and chocolate will go well. Considering steeping .5 lbs of biscuit and .3 lbs Special B in the water used (prior to adding to honey), to make it a smoreish bochet. Age on some heavy toast oak?

All respect to lawpaw...good luck getting cocoa powder to dissolve in room temp mead...better be prepared to stir for a while, and hopefully even have a drill-powered mixer/degassing wand. If that's the way you want to go, you're probably better off using cocoa nibs for that technique. When I've done cocoa mead in the past, I dissolve the powder in a warmed honey/water mix then add more water to bring up to volume.

Also, I think just about any honey is good for a bochet...I made mine using cheap clover honey from Sam's Club, and it came out awesome. I suppose if I had ready, inexpensive access to a varietal honey like meadowfoam, I'd try it, but if I'm getting enough meadowfoam honey to make a mead, I'm making a straight varietal mead!
 
Back
Top